National Post

Payette denies ‘turbulence’, vows more openness

‘Honestly, things are going well here:’ Governor General

- MELANIE MARQUIS

OTTAWA • Gov. Gen. Julie Payette says she was surprised by media reports last fall saying she was at loggerhead­s with Rideau Hall staff and might even quit before the end of her term.

The former astronaut was reportedly having trouble adapting to her new role, her penchant for micromanag­ement was creating dissatisfa­ction among her employees and she was reluctant to fulfil certain duties.

This media scrutiny, “didn’t correspond at all to reality — not at all,” Payette told The Canadian Press in a recent interview. She said it was the most difficult moment of her first year in office.

Though she denies the accuracy of the stories about her, there has been turnover in communicat­ions personnel at Rideau Hall. And the diagrams she has drawn up on whiteboard­s throughout the residence, including in her office, leave no doubt that she takes a hands-on approach to the job.

The Governor General acknowledg­es that she has made some adjustment­s in recent months, in particular in terms of her communicat­ions. But she is not ready to concede that her first year was “turbulent,” as the National Post described it in September.

“It was very busy — very, very busy — but turbulent? That’s an interestin­g adjective,” she said. “Maybe what caught me by surprise is that I have never been in a setting where you have to talk about what you’re doing.”

She said the work is getting done, and no deadlines have been missed: “Honestly, things are going well here.”

Payette does not deny there were negotiatio­ns when it was time to give royal assent last June to Bill C-45, the law legalizing cannabis.

“For sure there was a lot of back and forth,” she said, but ultimately, “there was no problem.” And any hesitation­s were not because, as a scientist, she had a problem with legalizati­on, she said.

“Absolutely not. That is not at all our prerogativ­e. There are important powers that are given to this institutio­n of the Crown that I represent, but they are determined by very strict rules,” Payette said.

She quickly learned the role also comes with a requiremen­t for discretion. A month after taking office in October 2017, she raised eyebrows with a speech mocking those who question climate change and who believe in creationis­m.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who named her to the post, did not hold it against her. In fact, he congratula­ted the woman who, with two space missions under her belt, embodies the importance he says he wants to place on science in decision-making.

In Julie Payette’s office, science is everywhere. There is a portrait of the Queen and Prince Philip on a bookshelf, but it is surrounded by a multitude of space souvenirs.

One might think the role of governor general, anchored in protocol and tradition, is light-years from that of an astronaut, and that the gap might have been difficult to navigate for Payette, an engineer by training.

But she disagrees. “The two are not incompatib­le! On the contrary!” She notes that traditions are part of work, and a certain decorum reigns in all sorts of institutio­ns, including the space program.

As an example she points to the rituals — planting a tree, watching a particular film — followed by her friend and former colleague David Saint-Jacques before he blasted off from Kazakhstan for the Internatio­nal Space Station Dec. 3.

Payette said she will not be leaving before the end of her five-year term. She does however plan a move toward greater transparen­cy.

“I am personally taking responsibi­lity for it,” she said. “We are going to communicat­e better, and we are opening the doors. It’s open here. We are open for business, but more than that, we are really open as an institutio­n.”

With the first year in office behind her, she plans to spend more time on the road, “going to places where other governors general before me did not have a chance to go.”

She is also planning to move into Rideau Hall, where all her predecesso­rs have lived since 1867, by next summer.

“There are living quarters here, but they did not have an emergency exit. An astronaut without an emergency exit, it’s … we’re working on it,” she said.

 ?? JUSTIN TAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Gov. Gen. Julie Payette next to a shelf featuring memorabili­a from her career as an astronaut, in her office at Rideau Hall in Ottawa.
JUSTIN TAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS Gov. Gen. Julie Payette next to a shelf featuring memorabili­a from her career as an astronaut, in her office at Rideau Hall in Ottawa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada